U.S. National Data

Deaths in Connecticut from Smoking

Adults who die each year from their own smoking

4,900

Kids now under 18 and alive in Connecticut who will ultimately die prematurely from smoking

56,000

Smoking kills more people than alcohol, AIDS, car crashes, illegal drugs, murders, and suicides combined — and thousands more die from other tobacco-related causes — such as fires caused by smoking (more than 1,000 deaths/year nationwide) and smokeless tobacco use.

Smoking-Caused Monetary Costs in Connecticut

Annual health care costs in Connecticut directly caused by smoking

$2.03 billion

Medicaid costs caused by smoking in Connecticut

$520.8 million

Residents' state & federal tax burden from smoking-caused government expenditures

$869 per household

Smoking-caused productivity losses in Connecticut

$1.25 billion

Amounts do not include health costs caused by exposure to secondhand smoke, smoking-caused fires, smokeless tobacco use, or cigar and pipe smoking. Tobacco use also imposes additional costs such as workplace productivity losses and damage to property.

Tobacco Industry Influence in Connecticut

Annual tobacco industry marketing expenditures nationwide

$9.5 billion

Estimated portion spent for Connecticut marketing each year

$73.6 million

Published research studies have found that kids are twice as sensitive to tobacco advertising than adults and are more likely to be influenced to smoke by cigarette marketing than by peer pressure. One-third of underage experimentation with smoking is attributable to tobacco company advertising.